Another submission from an apparently disgruntled Duran Duran fan (who wishes to remain anonymous) who was disgusted by the week of remixed covers that appeared previously on AllBum.Art. This one is, apparently, much classier. The original cover of Perfect Day shows an ice-cream sundae. The remix shows a topless babe swimming in the sea off a tropical island. Classier, maybe? Splishy, definitely.

What do we learn from the original cover of Cool by Gwen Stefani? Very little. The picture of Ms Stefani is taken from the video for the song. And the title of the song is Cool. And it is in stereo with some kind of fidelity, whatever that means in an age of digitally delivered audio clarity. The remixed cover tells a different story. Whilst the fidelity may still be there, it may not last if the girl shown, who is unquestionably very cool, is to be helped out by some warm blooded male. Melting!

You may have noticed a theme over the past few days here at AllBum.Art - the theme being 'songs with the word Feel in the title'. Today's remix comes from The Jacksons and is the 1970s classic Can You Feel It. On the original cover we see The Jacksons but they look bored, and what it is they are feeling (even if it's the music) is not that obvious. On the remix we see a babe with another babe resting her high heeled, stocking clad leg on her bare chest. The obvious question of 'can you feel it' seems to need no explanation here. Sharp!

Following yesterday's track entitled 'Feel So Real', today's remix comes from rapper Mase (or should that be Ma$e) and is called Feel So Good. The theme of the remix is similar but in this case instead of feeling real but being false, it appears that what is being felt is probably real, and is also good - if you define good as bouncy which some do and some don't. Hopefully Ma$e would. And would enjoy feeling to check the level of goodness. Would you?

Hmm... Now what is it that Steve Arrington could be singing about in his song Feel So Real? It cannot possibly be something that is actually real, because if it was, there would not be a need to declare that it feels real. By deduction, therefore, it must be something (or somethings) that is (are) unreal, or in other words false. And nothing is so false than the boobs displayed on the babe shown in the remix. She appears to be feeling them herself and whilst they may feel real, they almost certainly aren't. We hope that has cleared it up for you.

The original cover for Fire Burning (The Dancefloor) by Sean Kingston shows the silhouetted figures of several people boogying on down against a backdrop of a mirror ball and flames licking around their feet. Of course the big question here is what do those people in the silhouettes look like? The big answer seems to be revealed in the remix where it is revealed in a revealing way that the shadows are caused by a group of naked chicks dancing in a revealing way. Shawty!

Dancing In The Street. What could have been more outrageous in the 1960s than the suggestion from Martha Reeves & The Vandellas, that dancing anywhere other than in a dance hall was acceptable. Of course today anything can happen in the street, including dancing - but dancing with no clothes on too - as is perfectly illustrated by the babe on the remix of the cover. Wiggle it!

And all the colored girls go, 'doop-de-doop-de-doop'... Why they do this is not certain and even listening to the whole of this early 1970s song by Lou Reed adds very little certainty to that aspect. What it does add is some color around what a Walk On The Wild Side actually means. The remix attempts to capture more of what walking on the wild side might mean today, being less about subversive gender-bending lyrics and more about getting naked and wild on the streets of a city. Striding!

Bob Marley was famously quoted as saying, 'no woman, no crime'. In this song, Three Little Birds, he sings about how the arrival of three birds on his doorstep cheers him up. But the original cover has no woman. According to the urban dictionary, the term 'Bird' refers to a young woman. And so now the picture is complete as the three 'birds' that cheer up Mr Marley stop him from committing any more crime. Tweety!

An early hit for none other than Mr Bruce Springsteen, Cover Me was a hit before he became the rock legend that he is today. The earliness of the song is very much reflected in the cover of the single. This poor effort shows Mr Springsteen sitting on a car, which although it could be argued is in some way covering it, it's not wholly convincing as an argument. Much clearer is to drive the car away and leave a naked chick standing there desperate to cover herself to protect her modesty, what's left of it. Blanket!